Sociology

This interactive breakout, led by Lisa Pytlik Zillig of University of Nebraska-Lincoln, offered an opportunity to address the topic of Sociology with colleagues and potential collaborators. The conversation included issues such as models of trust, decision theory with incomplete information, models of cooperation for prevention of and reaction to cyber threats, models of communication in evolving wireless infrastructures, social networks of hacker subcultures, and using online social network data as a cyber-security tool.

This and all the other breakouts have been documented with both written notes and graphic recordings:
(click an image or pdf link to see it full size)

Indicate your interest in collaborative research possibilities in this area using the comments field below. Questions, suggestions, and research ideas relevant to the topic are welcome:

Register Your Interest

Whether or not you were able to join us for the SaTC Cyber Café, we invite you to continue to explore collaborative research possibilities between computer science and the social sciences by registering your interest in the breakout session pages, and find potential collaborators in the list of participants.